M.G. v. Yakima Sch. Dist. No. 7

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 2024
Docket101,799-5
StatusPublished

This text of M.G. v. Yakima Sch. Dist. No. 7 (M.G. v. Yakima Sch. Dist. No. 7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M.G. v. Yakima Sch. Dist. No. 7, (Wash. 2024).

Opinion

FILE THIS OPINION WAS FILED FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON MARCH 7, 2024 IN CLERK’S OFFICE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON MARCH 7, 2024 ERIN L. LENNON SUPREME COURT CLERK

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

M.G., by and with his Guardian ad Litem,) Priscilla G., ) No. 101799-5 ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) En Banc ) YAKIMA SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 7, a ) municipal corporation, ) ) Petitioner. ) Filed: March 7, 2024 ________________________________________)

MADSEN, J.—Washington state law and administrative code regulate the

imposition of student discipline by school districts. Both prohibit the indefinite expulsion

or suspension of a student as a form of discretionary discipline. RCW 28A.600.015(1),

.020(6); WAC 392-400-430(8)(a). Here, Yakima School District No. 7 (District)

expelled a high school student, M.G., on an emergency basis and extended it to a long-

term suspension without providing M.G. with the statutorily required procedural

protections. No. 101799-5

The Court of Appeals held that M.G. was indefinitely suspended in violation of his

statutory procedural rights and reversed the superior court’s summary dismissal of

M.G.’s suit. The Court of Appeals also determined that the case is not moot since M.G.

did not voluntarily withdraw from high school in the District following the District’s

denial of his request to return to his regular educational setting. It concluded that M.G.’s

long-term suspension for an indefinite period of time violated RCW 28A.600.015(1) and

WAC 392-400-430(8). The court also found that M.G. was not precluded from seeking

compensatory education for the time he was excluded from his regular educational

setting. We affirm the Court of Appeals.

In addition, M.G. seeks to strike sections of the District’s responses to the amici

briefs. We grant the motion to strike in part.

BACKGROUND

M.G. and his mother live in Yakima County, Washington. He resides within the

boundaries of the District. In 2019, M.G. began attending Eisenhower High School.

While in middle school, M.G. had signed a behavior agreement, or “gang contract.”

Clerk’s Papers at 5-6.

Shortly after the 2019 school year began, the District emergency expelled M.G.

from Eisenhower for violating the gang contract. The basis for expulsion included M.G.

wearing a red shirt, which is affiliated with the Norteño gang, and M.G.’s altercation with

a student. Approximately two weeks later, the District converted M.G.’s 10-day

emergency expulsion into a long-term suspension, totaling 12 days. The District

2 No. 101799-5

provided written notice to M.G. the next day. The notice stated in part, “Due to this

situation and the involvement in others, aka victim of previous threat, [the student] will

be long-term suspended and placed in an alternative educational setting.” Id. at 42, 77-

78.

M.G. appealed the suspension. Following a hearing, the District sent M.G. and his

mother a written hearing decision affirming the long-term suspension of 12 days and a

return date of September 23, 2019. M.G. did not appeal. However, one day prior to the

conclusion of the suspension, the District’s executive director of student life wrote to

M.G.’s mother, informing her that the District’s school transfer committee decided that

M.G. was prohibited from returning to Eisenhower. M.G. did not receive any notice

regarding the educational services he would be provided during his suspension.

Approximately one month after the conclusion of the suspension, the District

enrolled M.G. in Yakima Online, a computer online learning program established by the

District as an alternative learning experience. M.G. signed up for art, science, and music

classes. M.G. lacked a laptop at home, so he would travel to a distant computer lab to

access his classes.

M.G.’s performance was unsatisfactory. The District assessed M.G.’s academic

levels and found that he performed at a grade level below that required at Yakima Online.

Shortly after beginning Yakima Online, M.G., through counsel, spoke with Eisenhower’s

principal and vice principal. They acknowledged that M.G.’s suspension ended, but

stated that he could not return because of his gang-associated “Mongolian” hairstyle that

3 No. 101799-5

violated school policy. Id. at 7. No new form of written discipline had been received in

relation to M.G.’s hairstyle.

In the following months, M.G.’s counsel initiated discussions with the District,

seeking a transfer for M.G. from the online classes to a building-based high school. At

one meeting, the District’s representative acknowledged that the online learning program

was not meeting M.G.’s needs. M.G. unsuccessfully sought reenrollment in another high

school in the District. The requested transfer was denied based on M.G.’s refusal to alter

his alleged gang-style haircut and on incidents in which M.G. visited different schools

under a different name and was seen flashing gang signs. The denial letter cited Yakima

School District Policy 3131, which gives the District the right and responsibility to enroll

students and determine enrollment options in classrooms.

In response, M.G. requested reconsideration of the District’s decision denying his

transfer request. A meeting was held with members of the District who participated in

the denial of the transfer decision. Shortly after that meeting, the principal of Yakima

Online provided an intervention plan to M.G. M.G. opposed the plan and instead sought

to return to his regular educational setting.

In March 2020, counsel for M.G. received a letter from the District, affirming the

previous denial of M.G.’s request to transfer to a high school within the District and cited

M.G.’s refusal to change his hairstyle as the basis for denial. M.G. then sent a letter to

Eisenhower two days after receiving the denial letter, requesting that he be allowed to

return to Eisenhower in accordance with WAC 392-400-430(8)(b). The letter identified

4 No. 101799-5

Eisenhower as M.G.’s regular educational setting following the end date of his

suspension.

The District responded by e-mail and, without a hearing, denied M.G.’s request.

The District again invoked M.G.’s refusal to change his hairstyle and alleged gang

affiliation. However, considering the newly remote nature of education during the

COVID-19 pandemic (coronavirus disease 2019), the District allowed M.G. to attend

Eisenhower online and provided M.G. with a laptop and access to wireless Internet.

The following month, M.G. appealed the District’s March decision denying his

request to return to Eisenhower under chapter 28A.645 RCW. M.G. argued that he was

statutorily entitled to reinstatement at Eisenhower and that the District violated his

constitutional right to an education and to due process prior to denying him in-person

schooling due to his hairstyle and clothing.

For relief, M.G. sought an order under chapter 7.24 RCW, the Uniform

Declaratory Judgments Act (UDJA), requiring the District to return him to Eisenhower

and afford him compensatory education services for the time that he was excluded from

his regular educational setting following his suspension.

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